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Cops in Culture #4: Death in Paradise
With its exotic setting and undemanding nature, Death in Paradise is the product of a racist paradigm which it in turn reinforces in its audience.
Cops in Culture #3: Hot Fuzz
Hot Fuzz is a police movie about police movies, and the relationship between media and real policing.
Knife Crime Prevention Orders: Punitive, not preventative
Pre‐emptive intervention is premised on slippery, speculative assessments police make about whether somebody is the ‘type’ of person who might offend at some point.
Cops in Culture #2: Edward II
Jarman’s film reminds us that police were invented to maintain a new social order, just as queers were invented to be excluded from it.
Cops in Culture #1: Fargo
While Fargo is ostensibly a show about good cops trying to keep a handle in a world of utter depravity and corruption, Fargo also really wants to abolish the police.
Cops in Culture #0: Introduction
Given the role that media representations play in shaping how people feel about the police, the conflicted feelings of abolitionists in the audience are worth taking some time to reflect on.
Preventing Prevent: 10 Years On
Abolishing Prevent must be part of campaigning against surveillance and policing more generally, as one manifestation of the wider logics through which they operate.
Black Resistance to British Policing by Adam Elliott-Cooper
Black Resistance to British Policing is well written and jargon free. It is informed by activism and scholarship and makes an important contribution to ongoing anti-racist and abolitionist activity.
Policing by Consent
The state could maintain its power through direct military oppression but, with a strategically deployed police force and the cultivation of a consenting public, it doesn’t need to.
From defunding to privatisation: Considerations for abolitionists
Article by Rohan Rice drawing attention to the neo-liberal austerity measures already taken in relation to police funding that resulted in privatisation. Arguing that abolition of the police, rather than defunding, should be our demand
What’s wrong with Secure Schools?
The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill will provide the legal mechanism for charities – including Multi-Academy Trusts (MATs) – to operate prisons for the first time in England and Wales.
The Brixton uprisings of 1981: 40 years on
On the 40th anniversary of the Brixton uprisings, Abolitionist Futures pays tribute to the struggles against racist policing that profoundly shape the reality of Britain today, and which have left their lasting mark on its history.
#KillTheBill Coalition Statement
The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill is a dangerous and unnecessary piece of legislation that endangers the rights and safety of every single one of us.
#RIPtheIPP Sentences
As we push to #KillTheBill we need to also bring an end to the terrible situation faced by prisoners still on IPP sentences. We need to #RIPtheIPP
Reading group: Lewisham Arthouse
New reading group using our reading list starting soon. Faciliated by Lewisham Arthouse artists’ cooperative, South London
#KILLTHEBILL
A series of online events to support the momentum rising to oppose the draconian Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill 2021. 17/03/2021 & 18/03/2021 & 19/03/2021.
The false promise of hate crime laws
S Lamble writes about the false promise of hate crime, arguing that longer sentences and widening criminalisation does not increase safety for women
Book Club: Mutal Aid by Dean Spade
23/3, 27/4, 25/5 - Abolitionist Futures Book Club. Reading Dean Spade’s Mutual Aid
Event: Justice Means Everyone
17/02/2021 - Justice means everyone is a series of 4 webinars bringing to the fore conversations that occur at the faultlines of the left.